> So not a young earth creationist?
No, no, no. Not even close.
> In fact, people who go with the science, probably most atheists, don't think that the universe caused itself.
Science (and math) teaches that at one time the universe was a dimensionless singularity, where the physical forces didn't exist and the laws of nature were inoperative: zero spatial and zero temporal extension. So how could something in nature cause the Big Bang if nature didn't exist? What was the causal mechanism of the Big Bang?
> Then you don't understand the science.
Now, now, no reason to jump to conclusions and into insult. I understand science quite well, thank you.
> Not understanding something, them asserting something based on that lack of understanding
Considering that I didn't do this, the accusation fades on the floor with no takers.
> But you do believe, not because of evidence, but because your religion teaches it and teaches you to defend out, the notion that a creator being exists, and has always existed, despite there being no good evidence for it.
There is almost nothing in this sentence that is true. Your assumptions about me are just "out there." I'm an evidentialist: everything hangs on the evidence. Blind faith has no part in my thinking. I believe in a creator because the logical arguments and scientific evidence, combined with the evidences of my experiences, lead me to infer God as the most reasonable conclusion.
> Why do you think the big bang started everything, except your god?
Science tells us the Big Bang started everything.
- Mathematical calculations of rates and directions of expansion lead us to a singular point.
- Light's wave nature and its speed give us the age of the universe from a beginning point roughly 13.8 billion years ago
- The electromagnetic spectrum informs us of the age of galaxies
- Stellar parallax along with Doppler shift reveal distances and movements away from a central point of origin.
The Big Bang cosmological model fits all of these evidences.
Other evidences for the Big Bang:
- The night sky is dark. If the universe were infinite, there would be enough light to fill it—even dust wouldn't diminished the accumulated light from an infinity of stars over an infinitely large cosmos. Instead we have blackness. Olber's paradox shows us the universe is neither infinite in size or infinite in time, or neither.
- Quasars exist in the distant cosmos, which means they were common at one time but are no longer common. Occam's Razor: the universe was different in the past than it is now.
- The Expanding Universe. Redshift and the math confirm it.
- Cosmic microwave background radiation gives us a picture of the universe long ago. Light is old but not infinite, as far as we know.
> Who says that there wasn't something else outside of the universe, or three universe existed in another state
There is no evidence of other universes (multiverses). We follow the evidence. It's prejudicial to just make up stuff to suit our preconceived notions.
> Why can't time, space, and energy exist in a different state outside the universe?
Scientists are working all the time on speculations about this. If it's possible it has yet to be shown as possible. We have to follow the evidence, not fanciful speculations.
> There are literally thousands of ideas that could have lead up to the big bang.
Sure, there are always plenty of theories and guesses until we know the truth. Then there's only the right one.
> Why do you fallacious say that it was either a god, or out of nothing?
It's not fallacious at all. There are logical and scientific arguments for the existence of God that are far stronger than the arguments against, and that also have sufficiency of explanation, which alternate theories lack. We follow the logic, the science, and the evidence.
> But you don't have evidence to support it.
I have plenty of evidence to support what I believe. What I question is what evidence you have to support what you believe.
> Telling us that a magic man in the sky willed it into existence does not tell us why.
I didn't invoke a magic man in the sky at all. I followed the logic and evidence to the conclusion that theism is the most reasonable conclusion based on the evidence.
> And science absolutely can tell us why things happen. If you know how something happened, you'll probably also figure out why.
Science does its diligence to explain why things happen, yes. But there are things science simply can't tell us:
- Is there a being that is God?
- How should we as humans live?
- Is there life after death?
- What is our place in the universe?
- How are we to purposefully relate to other creatures?
- Are WWF fights fixed?
Science doesn't and can't address some of the topics where we need the most help: religion, politics, law, and morals, for example.
> Take lightning for example. This used to be credited to an angry god. Then we learned what causes it. So we can tell you why lightning strikes.
Yep. You're right. But this doesn't take us anywhere except one example of superstition.
> But you agreed with me that it is a story.
Of course. Even my life is a story. The history of our country is a story. The biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. is a story.
> Kinda putting the carriage before the horse here.
Not at all. I believe the stories are true because there is evidence that gives them credibility. I have discovered no reason to concur that the writers "didn't know any better". I see just the opposite, actually. It's not because I "believe" it's true but rather because I'm convinced by the evidence that it's true.
> Nope, you just don't like the truth.
Now, now, no reason to insult. The truth is EVERYTHING.